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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1913-07-10, Page 6nese, .1,11.111,e 1111111111,1 It I e II 1,,,iou For Infants itiud Chilit2en, YouVO thriayseitf.:(,111 Bean:i the , kkgetabloPiTpuotionferAs- Slinilating thel'30d andlleg Oa- ring thes SMEACIIS ES,SIL:0Wols 4.P4MISOrie" Proinolss1)10,esti0n,Cheerful-* 'MSS andllestOostains neither 'Oiyann,Morphine nor Ilioo Nook l\TATi °TIC. .1:2,4.:2 a rad .11/rIphil $ee,i etizien ars a• liur.AtIte Snits .• Alas Sad 4, I ipperndl t m coone0.6,14... 1,45ny Seed • Om/la .ftupf• . iautlyrem, A perfect Remedy l'o r Consl:pa- tion, Sour Storilach,D Ian iloon, IATorras,Convulsions,l'everisli- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. — TacSimile Signature of 9ffsea NEW '170FIN, . FRAC, COPT' OF WRAPIogis. Clj i yr of -viva For Over. Thhiy Years CEVITRIIIIGOMPATIY, iC1lV 4 ORB Cirf. .,....a.mmoincm..3.mesommAmmour atIM MOMISon••••=••••• A Generous 4udge. = Lord Blackburn was one of the most conacientious men that ever meted out justice on the bench. Not Song after his appointment as a judge he was trying an action in which tlis plaintiff sought to -recover damages for an injury that had caused him the loss of an eye. The counsel for the plaintiff, dwell- ing on the seriousness of -the injury to his client, 'spoke of it as blighting his career.. "I jiave lost the sight of an eye, Mr. ----," interposed Mr, Justice! Blackburn, "and it has not blighted my career." The jury, not unaffected by ths judge's remark, awarded the plaintiff but trifling. damages. Blackburn was conscience-stricken. He thought it over, and the next day he sent the plaintiff a check for E50 sOte.• _Tv. F©O .WITH -A Serious fechlem. BAC WATER WAS THE CAUSE. MRS. EDWARD KINGSTON, Mirror, Alta., writes-'Comieg to the North- west from B.C., in the summer of 1910, we were face to face with the serious pro- blem of tieing able to secure good drink- ing water; this we could not get, so were obliged to drink water containing a great • deal of alkali, with the result that we were all troubled with Diarrhma. For- tunately, Ilre had a bottle of AR. row- rsts's DiereAcr oe Warm STRAWBURRY in the house which soon relieved our sufferings.. I have always kept a bottle in the house since obtaining such bene. ficial results from its use when my boy as a baby was similarly troubled. 'It Etas always proved a friend in need,' ".• There are many inaltations of "Dn. Powtrie's", When' you ask for the well- Isnowu article, 'insiston being given it. It has been, on the market for over sixty- • five years, and has always given the greatest of satisfactioa, • It cures when all others fail. ! See that the name of The T. Milburn Co., Limited, appears on the yellow' , wrapper. ; Price, 35 cents. •'Quaint Remedies. Tiger's flesh and new-born puppies were among old remedies, said Dir. F. M. Sandwith, during the course of sa. lecture which he delivered at the I:City of London School recently. One book, he said, recommended a live spider to be rolled in butter and formed into a pill and then swallowed as an antidote to jaundige. Vipers •were held in high esteem, and a broth !made from them Aron - • KEEPING UP THE DAIRY QUALITY then iise eyeeignt. in tile sin, unbeensn and eighteenth centuries powdered mummies were prescribed, and so great was tbe demand that fraud led to more mummies being supplied than ever came out o/ Egypt. It must be remembered that the ra- tional view of disease was quite mod- ern. In some of the older herbal tvorke a striking fact was the constant recommendation 'of various remedies for bruises which gave one some idea of themanners of the day. Sohn Gerrard, who was chief gar- dener of Lord Burleigh's garden in the Strand, and had a garden of his OWD. in Holborn (then called 67 "sub- urb" of London), published a book in 1597 as his own, although it was in fact a translation of a Belgian herbal. Gerrard recommended Solomon s seal" for the taking away in one night of the blackness of bruises caused by falls, "or women's wilfulness in tum- bling upon their hasty husband's fists, or such like." -Manchester Evening News. THE CLINTON NEW's]El G. N. Grilling, writing in the Iowa Homestead on the economy ,of dairy farmers -talsing heifer calves, says; 1 tad a long talk with one:of the lend - Ing dairymen of out country the other , day, He said that he owed the greater Part of his success to the fact that be raised the heirer pelves from the hest cows in his herd to take their place in the dairy. He prefers, to co this be- . caaegood dairy heifers are very hard to buy and by rearing the home prod- uct he is able to bringsit pp just the Way he thinks a dairy calf should be' reared. This dairy farmer claims that many • animals or good WOOF Mid natural ability as milk producers do not attain their best becauSe they were not Prop- • erly cared for'when developing. Much of the 'future worth of the cow is de- termieed in the first year or two of its life. Ifunderfed it will be Stunted and undersized, end if, dirty,or lousy it rein be nervous and depleted. A calf, no matter bow gentle by nature, will develop into a very vicious cow if constantly whacked and cursed when youhg. A. vicious, unreliable cour 110 matter -how 'ergo a prodacer, is not Worth !keeping in the dairy herd. This man likes to rise sldmmilk i growing the calves and recommends it highly, He even says that when the . milk is sold it pays to keep enougli for the -calves. While he recommends skimmilk, he cautions against using it A Gloomy Dog. Seven hunched funerals have al- ready been attended by a retriever dog at Inverallochy. The dog belongs to a fisherman and has been present at every funeral but one bf an adult person in the village for the lila four- teen years. He always absents him- self, however, from the funerals of children. The cemetery is two miles away, but the dog regularly walks all ithe way to the graveside. Another ;peculiarity credited him is that he is !aware of the approach of death, as he • is often found sitting in front of a .house where a dying person lies. An Old Proverb. Be a good husband and you will get a penny to spend, a penny to lend and a penny for a friend. Tortelseshell From Fibrida Coast The finest of tortoiseshell is said to be that which comes from the Indian archipelago, although much of that iffitained on the Florida coast is of .the very best quality. There are three rows or plates on the back of the ani - Mal, called "blades" by the fishermen. ftx the central row are fire plates, and in each of the others four plates, there are 25 small plates around the edges of the shell, known as "feet" or "noees." • The biggest turtle does hot furniah more than 16 pound of slier", Formerly the undershot] was discarded as worthless, but now it is ranch esteened for the delicacy of. coloring. Sometimes imitation of tor- toiseshell is made from the horns of cows. BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND Subjects taught by expert instructors at the Zedopelidial Y, M. C. A. BLDG.. LONDON, ONT. Students assisted to positions. College in sessign from Sept. 2nd. Catalogue free. Enter any time. J.W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal Caarterettaccountant se Vice -Principal There COnifott in knowing that you can obtain one tried and proved remedy thoroughly well adapted to your needs. Every woman who is troubled with headache, backache, languor, extreme nervousness and depression of spirits ought to try (The Largcet Sale of Any Medicine in the World) and learn what a difference they will make. By, pufifying the system they insure better digestion, sounder sleep, quieter nerves, and bestow the charm of sparkling eyes, a spotless rosy complexion and vivacious spirits. 'Thousands upon thousands of women have learned, happily,that Beecham's Pills are reliable and The Unfailing Home Remedy Prepared only by Thomas Beecham, St. Helens, Lancashire, England. • Sold everywhere in Canada and U. S. America, In boxes, 25 cents. Hougette's Fancy, the pure bred Guernsey cow herewith shown, is considered the best cow in the Is- land of Guernsey. She Is by Gov- ernor or LaChene, out of Red Ilose, and Is ten years old. She has won many prizes in her show ring ca- reer. in 1901 she was awarded a sil- ver cup for best cow and challenge cup offered by the Guernsey Farm- ers' association ahd in 1909 won first prize and king's cup. The next year she won first prize In first class and the silver cups given by the Agricultural society and the Guern- sey Farmers' association for best cow in the show. 1-Iougate's Fancy is owned by T. Mansell Simon, St. Saviour's, island or Guernsey. Thrirsday; • L5Ith, 1913, too freely, especially while the calves are very young and their stomachs un- able to use it all, as it causes scours. The calf is taught to drink, sweet whole milk being given for the first week, after which sweet skinmilk Is gradually substituted. Care is taken that the milk When given is not more nor less than the exact temperature oi' the calf's boay. This, be says, is very important. In about two or three Weeks the calf will begin to nibble, and. the best green stuff or bay on the place should be given to encourage her. Fresh aiy, sunshine and exercise are excellent health promoters and should be available for all stock. Ile does uot believe in breeding the heifer until twoswears old, for if bred before mature the result is an under- sized calf, aucl tbe cow herself is stunt- ed. As soon as a heifer comes to be producing normally her efficiency is tested, and if she falls belew standard she is sacrificed at once. By these methods he succeeds in maintaining a dairy herd of a very high standard. Every ten cent packet will kill more flies than WOO worth' of any sticky fly killer. 'Refuse substitutes, which are most unsatisfactory. It Pays to Raise Calves. As it is almost impossible to •buy good cows at reasonable prices the dairy farmer cannot do better than raise his own. In raising cows there is a chance for selection end training, and the owner knows what kind he has. The practice of buying fresh cows and feeding them heavily until they become fat and dry off, then selling them to the butcher, is fast thinning out the dairy cows of some sections. A record should be kept of the pro- duction or each cow, and none should be sacriacecl that will produce over 5,000 pounds of milk and 300 pounds of butter per year. MI heifer calves from all such cows should be saved ana properly raised. When mature, if they de not give proralse of being good producers, they can be sold for beef. A heifer calf can be brought to ma- turity for one-third to one-half what It will cost to buy a good cow on the market, and usually when mature will prove to be a better cow, especially it she is out of a good cow and sired by a good bull. WHY WOMEN BRCAK DOWN. Excitement .Due to Shopping May Do More Damage Than Hard Work. We are constantly hearing about overstrain in professional and business, men, but very little is said of the same condition in women. The family dec. tor, however, sees many cases of this kind In his practice. Women may not work so hard as men in money getting, but the rush of modern life affects them nevertheless. The old quiet life of women is gone. Social functions are carried out now under much the same conditions as business, and women, with their more excitable nerves, do iu fact suffer more acutely than lima. A. day's shopping in the swirl of traffic and babel of noises produces extreme nervous ex- haustion. It is a mistake to suppose 'that work Gone is responsible for utrvous break- dowu, remarks the London Mail. !Mod- ern nervous tension is due to many causes --the increase of education, the haste and speed characteristic of every affair of life, the irritability resulting from dazzling lights, bewildering noise and the whirl of amusements. The result of natural fatigue is a lowering of sensibility, which passes away entirely after rest. But the over- fatigue so common in the present time produces a state of irritable weakness which a night's repose fails to remove. A. woman suffering in this way will find that her heart beats more quietly and weakly, that her 1.5renth is "short," her temperature slightly raised and Oa she has lost her ordinary strength and vigor. To add to these evils many busy wo- men nowadays do not get enough sleep, and what sleep they hare Is of- ten disturbed by noises. To get the most out of life it is well to go slow. The only preventive and cure of overstrain is rest, and the wO man who lends a tranquil life wil really succeed in enjoying a maximum of its pleasures. • Pig Suggestions. Handle the brood sows so that the young pigs will begin to grow from the time of their birth. The pigs should be kept growing and developing so that at eight months of age they will be fit for market. Early and rapid growth is the most economical method, as well as produc- ing the best food material. If the young pigs are very fat and want to stay in the nest get them out on the ground or you will have cases of Ulu nips. Exercise on the ground will prevent and cure thumps. Don't be careless in teeding skim - milk. It should be fed sweet and warm to get the most value out of it. - Fa yin J ou CASTOR A For Infants -and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought l3ears the Signature of way us it coines-srores, knives, 500008 Mid all'? • Now, try.11.115 .way as you wipe and see if you do not like it bet- ter;:As you dry each piece sort it and Ii the sorted piles on the tray -forks, spoons, knires,-separately. Then when you carry this tray of sorted silver to the proper drawer you will only need to tiff the separated groups into their proper place. ULSTERMEN AT DRILL A CORRESPONDENT DESCRIBES ANTI -HOME RULE ASSEMBLY. Noldh Irish Farmers and Laborers Met Alter Dark and Although It Was at the B'usy Sehon Thirty - Eight Mustered and Practiced Manoeuvres Under Difficulties - An Orange Funeral, The London Time `correspondent writing from Enniskillen says; I will attempt to sketch two of the mast intereiting scenes that I have witnessed during nay visit to Ulster. Ube first of thcm awaited me in the yard of the Club, near Omagh. The club is situated -in the heart of a rathei lonely but rich district, occu- pied, I fancy, chiefly by strong farm. ers; and we drove to it across many rniles of a road which was shaded by high trees. Turning at last into a by -way of‘the countryside we saw be- fore us a modern house on the brow ofit httle hill, the owner of which sup. plies the , members of the club with' their weekly ineeting-place. Fine eta - blas and coach -houses end. a large field on the other side of the lane - the owner is a model farmer and an old resident of Mid -Tyrone --were at the disposal 05 the drill- i -aster, We pulled up at the gate, dis- mounted, and exchanged a few words with the earlier arrivals. Darkness had fallen. men were for the most part impressive types, and seem- ed to be drawn from a sturdy laboring stook. I was introduced to the presi- dent of the dab, a young farmer of great stature and strength. He show- ed me one of the .air -guns with which ths mehibers practice; it vsas no toy': He asked me what people in London were saying of Ulster. But these /elk. who had walked for miles across the fields after a hard day's walk and were now gradually assembling in the drill yard, seemed, as a rule, to be silent persons, or not given to con- versing with strangers. I About 38 men finally fell in for drill, a smaller must.): than usual, for the farnis are now busy; but the attend - race at the --- Club has been steady • and excellent all through the winter. The older men and younger boys stood aside while the roll was being called. They are to be trained for the reserve, and for commissariat and ambulance ' work. The drillmaster then put, for my benefit, a few questions to the voluin teers. "What this gentleman wants to know," he cried, "is, shortly, whether we are in earnest or only play-acting." "Ask them," I said, "if they would like a ParliameLt of their own in Bels fast." He dici so, but without much result. "You must remember," he explain- . ed apologetically, "that you are in 1 thi habit of talking to intelligent peo- ple is London." FOR THE SPRING TABLE. Indeed, I am not, ' I said qmckly, "and where would the Empire be with- out the brains of Ulster?" The situation bad become decidedly uncomfortable, but the drillmaster, An Easily Prepared Meat Course That who obviousl/ did not want a Parise - another form and obtained the re - For breaded cutlets buy about four quired answer. They were very well pounds of fore quarter of lamb, says content with things as they were; but the Boston Cooking School Magazine, if Home Rule must come, they would About half the fore quarter will be prefer a separate Parliament to Irish needed. Let it be cut in such a way government. The work of the even - that the shank is in one half and the ,ngthen proceeded, and the rnembera scrag or neck in the other. Take the joarsttrhaeat—ar. ICtluNbvaaditdoacrdeadrikt tao nthigehirt Will Appeal to Jaded Appetites. scrag half, remove the shoulder blade • ment in Ells er, put the question in ,....4 Thal2WIM-4. ..., , •,- TaiSSectional Fire. #;fic‘ nri to You ..., I-1'0011.1; ss.......,...-seesessesessasseSielesiWAVI • WO:a Lamp CUTLETS. and cut with the cleaver at the back bone to separate into cutlets. Steam until tender or cook In a casserole with vegetables (onions, carrots and parS- ley), with hot fat, until tender. Set to press wider a weight until cold. Cut in the places made trith the cleaver before cooking; dip in a beaten egg, diluted with four tablespoonfuls. of milk, then roll in soft, sifted bread crumbs and fry in deep fat until well colored, Serve surrounded with little heaps of string beans, carrots, cut juliessae fashion, and potato or turnip balls. The vegetables should be cooked tender -separately -and then tossed in butter, salt and pepper. If preferred the meat may be rolled in milk and then in flour and sauted in hot fat tried out from salt pork. Removing That Shiny Look. - As tailor shops are not always cosi- venient suggestions, for overcoming the unfortunate shiny appearance that will come to much worn woolen gar- ments through constant car traveling May be remedied very successfully lu this way: The right side of the skirt ta sponged with ammonia and water fri equal parts, and the skirt Is then press- ed on the wrong side with a hot iron while still damp. When the pile of the cloth has been fairly worn off and the ammonia treat- ment no longer removes the fatal alpine try another way: Lay the gar- ment fiat on a table and rub the smooth, shiny spot' gently with line sandpaper. The nap will be raised by thio method and the appearance of the garment much improved - !I New Ways With Small Silver. ' Glass and silvermust be dried liy hand, as they d� not dry tbeinselve0 as does china when scalded with wa- ter. Much time is lost in laying awe* ' silver. Watch yourself the next dinci and see how you lay the silver on the, ' tray. Do YOU just lay it down on OW for the field to be used, but an ex- tended movement of a difficult, kind was carried out along the laneway. asked if the pollee ever came by, and was told that sometimes they peeped over the hedge but had never entered the premises or interfered with the .members in any way. In Fermanagh I saw for the first time an Orange funeral. It was a striking scene, made the more impres- sive by the wild and historic sur- roundings in which it took place. An official who stood high in the ranks of local Orangemen, an earnest work- er and a famous "charaeter"-I bad sern him at the demonstration of last September -had died in the Bars of Bobo, at a place called Farnaeonnell. The Protestant church and graveyard are both exceedingly old, and, aituat- ed as they are in a Catholic district - the mountainous parts of Fermanagh are the Catholic parts - have rather fallen into disrepair. Near this church and graveyard, at the top of the windy 'hill which commands a view over Fer- managh to Donegal and Tyrone, a,nd over the lake of the Erne to the tow- ers of Enniskillen, the "wee moun- tainy man," as he was affectionately described, had made his home in lat- ter years. The place has many Nationalist as- sociations; north of us was Noonan's liole, a sheer drop of 180 feet, down svhich Don Maelloon, a Fenian in- former, was flung by his companions; south of us Behnore mountain which keeps many secrets of old Celtic ro- mance and heroism. When the pro- cession emerged from the farmstead tho fields were crowded by the Catho- lic population of the mountainside; and as it came slowly down the steep lane through the wind'and rain to the gates of the graveyard, the men com- posing it, two abreast, with their Orange scarfs and other insignia of the order, introduced a strange effect into the deselate beauty of the even- ing. Then in the bare interior of the old church, through whose walls all the wintsr's rain had penetrated, the usual Church of Ireland service wag conducted; iut after the burial had' taken place the Orangenn t formed up in a square by the grave, and with crossed hands saluted their dead master according to the ritual of the Order. Bachelors and Hypocrisy. These are some of the ad- vantages of the Sunshine Furnace. Our agent will be pleased to show you others, or write for booklet. The " Sunshine " has a straight -sided semi- steel firepot, extra heavily rib- bed • and made in two sections. The two sections allow for contraction and expansion --which prevents cracking. • The heavy ribs and semi -steel give extra strength and added radiat- ing surface. Ashes cannot adhere to the straight sides which assures an all-over clear fire. This means the • greatest heat from the fuel consumed. itao s- e Furnace London Toronto Montreal Winnipeg Vancouver St. John, N.E. Hamilton Calgary Saskatoon Edmonton 334 Sold by BM tt SUTTER wimissmommatiamonsezemEgosEill .4.11111•066.1.=16..1•102=, Implements Found. earthed in the Tunnel Valley ' N I esteetseeetseeseeeeeeeeeeesse • The Right Kind ol ri EDUCATION Prehistoric relics were recently ur • - Perthshire. A gentlemen inntiere°stretri • For your boys and girls is in the work, Rev. Frederiek Smith, of 0 up for consj.ktaton 311st 411 mw. Send for a copy of es • our curriculum. It w.11 prr- 9 e9 9:111t ssisne feets you Should aa 3 Isniew. 1-s. term inbs'e of our 3 • schools insurss a good. salurY 2 Enter any tirre g ;51.1,AW'S SUP:AM% T'ironto 49 11 Iv' e Crittrai nusiriesa 0 CO Col: .Yonge and Gerrard 0 Mr; es Tuioitu. • A, SH.A pm.NCIPAL. • ieGG0DS100GOGISOODG2001906601111 South Queensferry has found exce • lent evidence of the Palaeolithic man -examples, highly rolled as a' rule arid generally imperfect, of "rubbers" or skin-eurers: stones which were Us- ed for rubbing and sometimes "scrap- ing" the loose fatty matter from skins. Mr. Smith has also discovered other relics, generally in a dilapidated con- dition, such as chopper blades, with the handle or handle -end gone, and occasionally a recognized detached handle. They also came rayon what me probably "I.:layers' or knives, and Palaeolithic weapons. One of the re- lics was an example of what air. Smith has styled a "guillotine -trap" stone, believed to have been used to trap mammals. • About the worst hypocrite is an old bachelor who claims that he likes children. haa1so. ound one or more other Trapping a Dean. Mr, Frederic Harrison tells the following story of Dr. Gaisford, once dean of Christ Church College, Ox- ford, a typical "head" of the old school, whose autocratic disposition did not escape the notice of his pupils. A student of the house, in spite of formal orders of the tutors that no undergraduate should have leave to attend the Derby, succeeded in getting it by telling Dr. Gaisford that his tutor had declared that not even the dean hir»self could break the college rule. "Whatl" saici the dean. "They tell you I caunot give leave? I give you leave, sir -and report this order to yout tutor I" Robin Built In Pulpit. Before the commencement of pab- 1 Ile worship iu Winton Parish church on a recent Sunday it was discovered that a robin dislodged from the try had taken possession of the pulpit and built its net there. The offi- ciating clergyman, an asststant tilin- ister of a large eity churdb, decided to yield to the robin's claim of prior- ity of possession, and considerately condueted the service from the lectern, leaving the "sittiag" tenant unclis- turbed. Headquarters FOR Walling* and Riding Oliver plows 1. H. C. Gasoline Engines McCormick Machinery Pumps !and Windmills. ALL KINDS OP REPAIRS AND EXPERTING. CALL ON Mille? It URIC Corner of Princes ttnd Albert streets. aagiapalAMMes. tn.icaralannsgerseravarcas Cebtral:BnsinessCollege Stratford, Out. Canada's Best BOsincss College We, have thorough courses, and competent, experienced instructora We do more for our students and graduates than other schools do. At present we have applicatione offenng from $500 to11200 per ane num for trained help. Business men knew where they get the best help. We have three departments Commercial, Shorthand nasi Teleg- raphy. Get our free catalogue. T The family remedy for Coughs and Colds ' D. A. McLachlan, Principal "Shiloh costs so litt43 and does se much Speed of Meteors. Shooting stars or meteors move k vial: a velocity of from twenty-five r to Jorty-five miles a second. rial8141.1...R.40210.1191101111.212.1261.16MO: Women and Advertisements 1 1 1 OME statements are so saturated with their own moral as to require no comment. "Rid- ing on a car during the excitement over the naval battles between Russia and Japan," said Mr. Thomas Martindale, before the Retail Merchants' Association of Pennsylvania, "I observed that the men were reading the war news and the women were reading advertisements. Those women, I watched keenly, read every line of the advertise- ments, and then turned to the woman's page, This ride was a distance of eighty miles, yet at the journey's end the women had nor yet had time to turn to the actual news of the day. The women want advertisements to read, and you must present your business in a readable shape to be in the fight these days." is your Stock Moving? If not. Then we can Help You; New Era Ads pay—They get right at the people. THE NEW ERA, CLINTON TELEPHONE 30. 111111111111111Mr 1 1 1 1 1